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BA drops Tel Aviv to short haul (A320) with reduced tier points – and will fly via Larnaca

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British Airways has announced some substantial changes to its Tel Aviv service – changes which are likely to substantially benefit Virgin Atlantic, assuming that the latter resumes flights as planned in April.

Tel Aviv is being downgraded from a long haul route to a short haul route.

Not only will it be on an A320 aircraft from now on, but from 2025 it will only earn short-haul tier points in British Airways Executive Club.

British Airways A320 to Tel Aviv

Here’s what will change.

Instead of a Boeing 787, which was being used before the flight suspension, services will resume using an A320 short haul aircraft.

This isn’t unusual for British Airways, of course. Larnaca, Cairo and Sharm are similarly lengthy flights which use a short haul aircraft.

The difference here, of course, is that none of those routes are competing with Virgin Atlantic which offers a long haul aircraft with Premium Economy and beds in Business Class. El Al also uses a long haul aircraft on one of its two daily Heathrow flights.

Tier points will drop to short haul levels, but only from 2025

The downgrade will see British Airways Executive Club tier points reduced on the Tel Aviv route.

From 30th March 2025 – so you have 14 months notice – the London to Tel Aviv route will earn:

  • 80 tier points each way in Business Class (currently 140 tier points each way)
  • 40 tier points each way in flexible Economy (currently 70 tier points each way)
  • 10-20 tier points each way in no/semi flexible Economy (currently 20-35 tier points each way)
British Airways Tel Aviv flights Larnaca

Tel Aviv flights will now stop in Larnaca for a crew change

The Independent reports that Tel Aviv flights will resume on 1st April – with a catch.

There will be just four flights per week, using an A320.

Outbound flights will stop at Larnaca in Cyprus for a crew change. Passengers will remain on the aircraft for the 45 minutes that this will take.

A new crew will fly the short hop between Larnaca and Tel Aviv.

The reason for this is that, if the landing has to be aborted at the last minute, the crew has enough flying hours left to return to London. Without this flexibility, BA would be forced to make emergency arrangements to land at an alternative airport outside Israel.

Return flights will operate non-stop from Tel Aviv to Heathrow.

Virgin Atlantic is also due to resume flights to Tel Aviv on 1st April. This will obviously use a long haul aircraft (Virgin Atlantic doesn’t have any options!). You may want to switch across if you are looking for Premium Economy or for a ‘proper’ long haul Business Class experience.


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Comments (174)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Tiger of ham says:

    Cairo PAX have had this now for years. It’s grim!

  • Steve says:

    This route used to be flown by an A321 midhaul config during the winter season and a 787 during the summer, it was done that way for quite a long time the same as Cairo.

  • Chris says:

    Fly this route 4 times a year and will definitely not be flying BA now. Would much prefer VS Premium and would even fly EY even though status or miles benefits. Flying on short haul to LCA a couple of times a year is one of my worst experiences.

  • Ariel says:

    Any assumptions regarding this route should be taken with a grain of salt at the moment, but as someone who used to fly it almost exclusively on BA in CW, I will now be switching over to LY or VS.

    Had a look at some future dates, VS aren’t selling flights yet but there is approximately a £160 difference between BA, where I will get an A320 with a tight economy seat, and LY, where I will get a 787 with a proper business class flatbed. For me it’s a no brainer.

    LY also operates two daily flights out of LTN on 737s. It’s not a flatbed, but a 2-2 recliner is still better than what BA now offers, and is about £600 cheaper.

    It’s even worse in WT where BA is selling A320 seats for double what LY is charging for 787 seats.

    Bottom line – there is no longer any reason to fly this route with BA.

  • Tracey says:

    I wonder if BA will have LHR-LCA passengers on board the same flight. Could they also offer LCA-TLV?

  • Paul says:

    I’ve flown to TLV during the conflict on El Al (forced to change from BA) and never felt threatened. TLV would be very unlucky now to get affected (targeted), also the flight paths, and the city is pretty much normal. This is def. a bad business decision barring the reason of using LH aircraft elsewhere that are in very short supply atm. TP decision for the uncomfortably long flight seems to be discrimination against the ME which I just don’t get, and the regulars and US connecting traffic will disappear.

  • Azariah Gross says:

    I have 8 flights on this route in all classes which I forced British airways to move me to elal if they don’t change this I will likely drop ba as my main airline and prob move to virgin/delta

  • CheapCharlie says:

    Well that’s killed the route for BA.
    45 minutes in Larnaca, shorthaul TPs and a shorthaul economy experience for every passenger whether in ET or CE compared to a proper service from its competitors. Unless they price this at 25% of their competitors then this route is finished for BA.

    • Lady London says:

      …and that is precisely the reason BA has cancelled it.

      I spend a lot of time noting poor service standards by BA. But I never, ever doubt that each step BA takes is part of a well-thought-out and thoroughly financially evaluated commercial plan.

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